Black Duck Announces Open Source “Rookies of the Year”

BURLINGTON, MA – March 14, 2016 – Black Duck®, a global leader in automated solutions for securing and managing open source software, today announced the eighth annual Open Source Rookies of the Year, recognizing the top new open source projects initiated in 2015.

The selected projects show how diverse and ambitious open source software development has become. From communications to healthcare and beyond, they offer innovative solutions to a range of consumer- and enterprise-grade problems.

The 2015 Rookies class reflects three industry trends shaping the future of open source software:

Docker Containers: Docker, a 2013 Rookies of the Year selection, established containers and DevOps as the heirs apparent to server virtualization. In 2014, a number of Docker ecosystem players emerged, and the trend continues this year with several, including projects sponsored by Red Hat and Capital One.

Open Collaboration: Email isn't dead, but it's not as important as it used to be. The success of Facebook messaging and Skype for personal use fuels demand for similar solutions in the office, with real-time tools like Slack and GoToMeeting becoming standards. However, proprietary solutions face competition from open source alternatives which promise all the same features of the originals, but without the lock-in downside of proprietary solutions.

Artificial Intelligence: We may be a long way yet from truly “sentient” machines, but development teams are helping computers get smarter at getting smarter. Deep learning techniques aim to teach computers to teach themselves by using a system of multiple processing layers to model the neural network of a human brain. This year we recognize two new projects in the field of deep learning.

The 2015 Black Duck Open Source Rookies of the Year are:

Rocket.Chat – an open source web chat platform built for communities and companies wanting to privately host their own chat service.

Mattermost – an open source, on-premise Slack alternative, written in Golang and React.

Hubl.in – a free and open source video conferencing solution.

MXNet – a lightweight deep learning library created by DMLC, the people behind CXXNet, Minerva and Purine2.

Bazel – a subset of Google’s internal software development tools, building software quickly and reliably through a shared code repository in which all software is built from source.

React Native – a Facebook-sponsored framework for building native mobile applications using the React JavaScript library.

“This year's Rookies are impressive examples of how far open source has come, with start-ups like Mattermost and Glucosio as well as big players like Google, Facebook and Red Hat leveraging the open source community to help drive innovation in everything from DevOps and Docker container solutions to diabetes monitoring and real-time communication,” said Patrick Carey, Director of Product Management, who headed the Rookies selection process.

“These are sophisticated initiatives where the open source approach is a core part of the business strategy for speeding development, promoting adoption and providing the most value to their customers," Carey said.